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Mathematics 20 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Of all the numbers whose literal representations in capital letters consists only of straight line segments (for example, FIVE), only one number has a value equal to the number of segments used to write it.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

29. TWENTYNINE

OpenStudy (turingtest):

(number)=(# lines) FIVE=10 NINE=11 TEN=9 ELEVEN=19 suffix: TEEN=13 so can't add five or nine... prefixes: TWENTY=17 FIFTY=11 so again, can't add five or nine... next prefix after that is FIFTY, and I don't think we're gonna get that number of segments. That only leaves the possibility of a large 3-digit number working, but that seems unlikely In short, I don't know but it looks like there isn't one o-0

OpenStudy (anonymous):

TWENTY is 18 lines. NINE is 11.

OpenStudy (turingtest):

Oh you wrote an answer lol let me look

OpenStudy (turingtest):

lol I make my Y's like this|dw:1330452275602:dw|hence I saw it differently XD

OpenStudy (anonymous):

:P 29 is correct

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